Methods were devised for the large-scale production of syringomycin using stainless steel trays which were poured with agar medium, and then covered with cellophane. The bacteria were grown on the surface of the cellophane. Syringomycin was then extracted from the cellophane and purified by ion exchange column chromatography and partition chromatography; it was a single, low molecular weight, ninhydrin-reactive compound. Nine ninhydrin-reactive spots were detected in the acid hydrolysate of syringomycin by two-dimensional chromatography. Eight of the spots corresponded in R F and color to amino acids tentatively identified as aspartic acid, d-glutamic acid, serine, glycine, α-alanine, valine, d-phenylalanine and d-lysine. Investigation of some of the properties of syringomycin showed that its antibiotic activity was labile in alkaline solutions, especially above pH 8. Syringomycin is soluble in water and the lower alcohols, and insoluble in ether and chloroform. Its isoelectric point is about pH 7. Syringomycin has a wide spectrum of antibiotic activity. A species of each of six genera of bacteria, four different fungal species, a unicellular algal species and a Daphnia species were all inhibited by low levels of syringomycin. The growth of Geotrichum candidum, the most sensitive of the organisms surveyed, was completely inhibited by 24 μg syringomycin per ml. Syringomycin produced phytotoxic symptoms in the leaves of peach shoots when the stems were immersed for 24 h in a water solution of syringomycin containing 600 μg syringomycin per ml. The stems of peach shoots became brown and necrotic after being immersed for one week in a solution containing 6 μg syringomycin per ml. Inoculations of peach shoots with Pseudomonas syringae showed that the symptoms produced by the bacterium were very similar to the phytotoxic symptoms produced by syringomycin. Inactivation of the antifungal activity of syringomycin by mild pH manipulation also decreased its phytotoxicity proportionately. An antibiotic which was indistinguishable from syringomycin was isolated from diseased host tissues. It was concluded that syringomycin is probably the major phytotoxin in the bacterial canker disease of peach trees.